Dora ([info]sigelphoenix) wrote,
@ 2007-06-02 18:44:00
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Current mood: productive
Entry tags:feminism and sexism, school, sexual violence and harassment, women and violence

Preventative measures against violence [Women and Violence, Part 9]
[This is the final part of my series on Women and Violence, which I wrote as a project for a Women Studies course I took this quarter. For an explanation and information on my intentions with this series, please see the introduction.]

I realize that a quarter-long series of articles about violence against women can be depressing, and I'd like to end this on an optimistic note.

Unfortunately, I don't have The Solution to violence against women. Even I don't have delusions of being that wise. ;) But - and here I'm engaging in a bit of hubris - I believe in the power of language to educate and agitate for change. That's one of the reasons I chose to undertake this project, and why I choose to blog in general. Writing and dialoguing is important. It's powerful. It's consciousness raising in cyberspace.

The weakness of dialogue is that people can simply choose not to listen. Words are just words and, by themselves, can't stop something physical like violence. But, you know? Physical intervention isn't necessarily what stops violence, either. The kind of violence I've been writing about is more than a single, contained instance of extreme violence that can be thwarted by knocking out an individual perpetrator.

Instances of violence such as the ones I've written about don't spring up, fully formed and self-contained, out of vacuums. They come from someone 'who was always such a nice guy, but ..." They happen when factors that are already there 'just get out of hand.' They don't disappear once they've occurred - they leave traces. So what makes us think there aren't any traces before they happen? And those traces, being small and unremarkable, can also be changed by our small and unremarkable efforts.

Changing our definitions

First and foremost is the need to revise our understanding of what 'violence' is. Whether that means making the debatable move of classifying cosmetic surgery as violence, or the obvious and necessary recognition of marital rape as a form of rape, we need to make it clear that certain practices that society accepts without question are, indeed, harmful or violent.

It seems strange to say that we might be unaware of violence - that something so damaging could escape our notice - but in cases like marital rape, it's true. Women might be hurt or angered by their experiences, but if the surrounding society denies that they have experienced violence - if they are told that they are simply fulfilling their 'wifely duty' of providing sex for their husbands, whether they want it or not - they might have a difficult time articulating their suffering as being an instance of violence.

And without the label of violence, our ability to combat things like marital rape is hampered. Because then it's easy to dismiss it as a 'misunderstanding,' a 'mistake,' or just a 'bad experience' - unfortunate, but not worth action. Perhaps, in the case of marital rape, a bad husband - but certainly not a systemic problem that implicates our understanding of heterosexual relations. But with the language of 'violence' at our disposal, we can emphasize the harm and wrongness of these actions, and join our struggle to those against other forms of violence.

Changing our language

I've already talked about aspects of our language use that perpetuate violence against women. The way we talk about things - everything from the words that are 'normal' to use, to what is 'normal' to talk about at all - shapes how we think about practices of violence.

One aspect of our language that I want to highlight is our use of the virgin/whore binary. Our understanding of rape and sexual assault involves a dichotomy between women who are innocent, virginal victims of rape, and women who are promiscuous - and therefore can't be raped. This division is obvious in the ways that female rape victims are treated, as we scrutinize a victim's history to see: Did she ever have sex? Did she have sex with many men? Did she have sex with the alleged rapist? Did she have sex with him many times? Each 'yes' is one more blow against the victim's case, one more reason that she's a whore and not a virgin, and therefore not a 'real' victim.

One way we can fight against this discursive bias against women is to end slut-shaming. Stop making that division between women whom we like/who are like us and have 'enough' sex, and women whom we don't like/who aren't like us and have 'too much' sex (or too 'dirty' sex, or sex with 'too many' partners). Stop creating that artificial line which women must not cross, lest their ability to refuse sex no longer be respected. Stop buying into the idea that there even is an amount of sex that a woman can have that invalidates her ability to refuse sex.

And stop, stop, stop using 'slut' or 'whore' as an insult for women, even in non-sexual contexts, because it just reinforces the idea that this is a label we can use to punish women for doing what they're not 'supposed' to.

The influence of language doesn't stop here, of course. There's also the way we talk about violence against women, as something that women passively experience rather than men actively perpetrate against them. There are the ways we talk about women's emotions (especially anger) as opposed to men's as less valid, less rational. There's the way we talk about sex in general, as an aggressive activity that involves one party dominating another, and therefore automatically predisposed towards violence.

Changing our language means changing our understanding. And that means how violence is responded to, and how - if - violence happens at all.

Changing our ideas of women and men

In the previous entry I explored the ways in which women are socialized into keeping silent about violence against them. That's one of the many ways in which standard ideas about what 'women' should be work to perpetuate violence against women - supplemented by standard ideas about what 'men' should be that grant them impunity to commit violence.

Just like altering our language is a small but crucial step to altering our conceptions of violence, so is attacking the rigid gender roles that allow men to hurt women. For example, to counter the forced silence of women, we need to encourage women's assertiveness, from childhood onward. Stop telling little girls to quiet down, especially if we allow boys to be louder without censure. Stop telling girls that being 'ladylike' means not complaining, not making noise, not drawing attention to themselves. Stop shaming women who call attention to sexual harassment for 'making waves' in the workplace. Stop calling women 'bitchy' for being assertive - and if they're being overly aggressive, criticize them the same way we criticize overly aggressive men, rather than reserving gendered insults for them. Stop assuming that only mothers have to decide if they'll sacrifice work to be a stay-at-home parent. Stop judging mothers who aren't stay-at-home parents. Never, ever assume that a woman 'should' have sex with anybody, for any reason.

This change won't stop violence. It will make violence less easy, less expected, less unremarkable. So would other, similar changes, such as eradicating our expectations/ideals of women as passive, thin, delicate, gentle, sexy-but-not-too-sexy, self-sacrificing caretakers, emotional, irrational. Hand-in-hand with this change would be the end of expecting and encouraging men to be aggressive, dominating, emotionless, sex-obsessed, and violent.

These changes, while vast in scope, are not difficult to start. This is what we can do. It's well within our capabilities. Anyone who says that they can't stop violence against women is lying, either to themselves or others.

Keep thinking, observing, talking, writing, fighting.


x-posted to Shrub.com




(5 comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]amazon_syren
2007-06-03 01:17 pm UTC (link)
Hey, :-)

This has been a very good series, and you've capped it with some good ideas for changing one's personal behaviour. :-)

(Side note: You've got a bit of a coding problem up near the top that you might want to take a look at. :-)

I will likely be commenting more later on. :-)

- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]sigelphoenix
2007-06-04 05:50 am UTC (link)
Eep! *fixes* Normally I read over these things once I post them, if only for catching errors like this.

Thanks for the praise, and thanks for sticking with the series. I look forward to any more comments you might have.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]amazon_syren
2007-06-04 02:58 pm UTC (link)
I'm going through the rigours and joys of therapy right now. (No, really, this does have a point).

The lady I'm working with is very adament(sp) about People Create Their Own Reality and stuff like that.
It's what we were talking about the last time I was there.

While I can definitely wrap my head around *some* bits of what she said - things like deciding whether you're going to be a vitim and remain powerless vs choosing to take your own power back and, for example, be Absolute about choosing the lovers you want, and the situations you want, and the company you want, and what-not (rather than continuing to fear being touched sexually *at all* because someone(s) used sex as a weapon against you).
That I can get.

But I also... I hate the fight. That's basically what it comes down to. I resent that it's up to *me* to change a lot of behaviours *in other people* rather than them haveing to work on themselves. (You know exactly what that's like, I know).

So, while I'm quite willing to do the work to change *myself*, to help myself to be more confident, to get better at saying 'no' and putting the kind of strength behind it to have it taken seriously, I resent the suggestion that I *also* have to change everyone else.

I resent the suggestion that thousands of years of cultural president would have *no effect* on what happens, or does not happen, to me (as a woman, as a bisexual, as a white person, etc).
The lady I'm working with sees all that stuff - making reference to cultural conditioning and what-not - as taking power away from individual women (by saying, basically, "Look! Look at *everything* stacked against you! You really *don't* have any way to get out of this!")
Despite the fact that I can kind of see where she's coming from with that, I think it is far, *far* too easy to go from "Those attitudes are dis-empowering to women, no matter whose spin is put on them - the patriarchy's or the separatist-feminists, or what-ever)" to saying "Cultural president has *nothing to do* with what happened to Woman X. Clearly it was all her fault and she wanted it to happen".
Y'know?

I think it would be a very good thing if Everyone Else decided that, maybe, just maybe, they should become a little more self-aware and a little less ignorant of their own privileges and the systems that are in place to keep those privileges constant.

Anyway.

That's what I've been thinking about lately.

I have to run to work, now. :-)


- TTFN,
- Amazon. :-)

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]sigelphoenix
2007-06-05 06:44 pm UTC (link)
Yes, yes, yes! *sigh* I really wish people would stop mixing up "empowerment" with "shoving all the responsibility onto marginalized groups." Just because we choose to be strong and perservere despite oppression doesn't mean that people with privilege can then ignore oppression.

Audre Lorde wrote something about how the burden of education on the oppressed keeps their energies from being directed to more productive work. It's the perfect way to maintain a system of domination without being explicit about it.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]amazon_syren
2007-06-06 11:57 pm UTC (link)
It's the perfect way to maintain a system of domination without being explicit about it.

<*snort*>
Yeah, pretty much. :-P

(Reply to this) (Parent)


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